October 15, 2004
OP-ED COLUMNIST
Block the Vote
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Earlier this week former employees of Sproul &
Associates (operating under the name Voters Outreach
of America), a firm hired by the Republican National
Committee to register voters, told a Nevada TV station
that their supervisors systematically tore up
Democratic registrations.

The accusations are backed by physical evidence and
appear credible. Officials have begun a criminal
investigation into reports of similar actions by
Sproul in Oregon.

Republicans claim, of course, that they did nothing
wrong - and that besides, Democrats do it, too. But
there haven't been any comparably credible accusations
against Democratic voter-registration organizations.
And there is a pattern of Republican efforts to
disenfranchise Democrats, by any means possible.

Some of these, like the actions reported in Nevada,
involve dirty tricks. For example, in 2002 the
Republican Party in New Hampshire hired an Idaho
company to paralyze Democratic get-out-the-vote
efforts by jamming the party's phone banks.

But many efforts involve the abuse of power. For
example, Ohio's secretary of state, a Republican,
tried to use an archaic rule about paper quality to
invalidate thousands of new, heavily Democratic
registrations.

That attempt failed. But in Wisconsin, a Republican
county executive insists that this year, when everyone
expects a record turnout, Milwaukee will receive fewer
ballots than it got in 2000 or 2002 - a recipe for
chaos at polling places serving urban, mainly
Democratic voters.

And Florida is the site of naked efforts to suppress
Democratic votes, and the votes of blacks in
particular.

Florida's secretary of state recently ruled that voter
registrations would be deemed incomplete if those
registering failed to check a box affirming their
citizenship, even if they had signed an oath saying
the same thing elsewhere on the form. Many counties
are, sensibly, ignoring this ruling, but it's apparent
that some officials have both used this rule and other
technicalities to reject applications as incomplete,
and delayed notifying would-be voters of problems with
their applications until it was too late.

Whose applications get rejected? A Washington Post
examination of rejected applications in Duval County
found three times as many were from Democrats,
compared with Republicans. It also found a strong tilt
toward rejection of blacks' registrations.

The case of Florida's felon list - used by state
officials, as in 2000, to try to wrongly
disenfranchise thousands of blacks - has been widely
reported. Less widely reported has been overwhelming
evidence that the errors were deliberate.

In an article coming next week in Harper's, Greg
Palast, who originally reported the story of the 2000
felon list, reveals that few of those wrongly purged
from the voting rolls in 2000 are back on the voter
lists. State officials have imposed Kafkaesque hurdles
for voters trying to get back on the rolls. Depending
on the county, those attempting to get their votes
back have been required to seek clemency for crimes
committed by others, or to go through quasi-judicial
proceedings to prove that they are not felons with
similar names.

And officials appear to be doing their best to make
voting difficult for those blacks who do manage to
register. Florida law requires local election
officials to provide polling places where voters can
cast early ballots. Duval County is providing only one
such location, when other counties with similar voting
populations are providing multiple sites. And in Duval
and other counties the early voting sites are miles
away from precincts with black majorities.

Next week, I'll address the question of whether the
votes of Floridians with the wrong color skin will be
fully counted if they are cast. Mr. Palast notes that
in the 2000 election, almost 180,000 Florida votes
were rejected because they were either blank or
contained overvotes. Demographers from the U.S. Civil
Rights Commission estimate that 54 percent of the
spoiled ballots were cast by blacks. And there's
strong evidence that this spoilage didn't reflect
voters' incompetence: it was caused mainly by
defective voting machines and may also reflect
deliberate vote-tampering.

The important point to realize is that these abuses
aren't aberrations. They're the inevitable result of a
Republican Party culture in which dirty tricks that
distort the vote are rewarded, not punished. It's a
culture that will persist until voters - whose will
still does count, if expressed strongly enough - hold
that party accountable.

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